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Tuesday, 05/24/2016 10:16:57 PM

Tuesday, May 24, 2016 10:16:57 PM

Post# of 113924
dr sharp has used clinical isolates, "GOT BIOME"?!!!!
SCIENCE WILL KEEP ADVANCING AND THE MIT-1000 WILL TRY
TO BE RIGHT THERE, IN THE SAME TRAIN!!!!!!!!

IF HE GETS A BIOME PROJECT FROM JEFF, LOOK OUT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


HERES PROOF ON TWO FRONTS THAT SCIENCE CAN LITERALLY PROPEL THE MIT-1000
TECHNOLOGY!!!!
(for lack of a more complete explanation)



http://www.sciencemag.org/topic/optics

Bending the rules of light

The world around us is bathed in light, providing the input to our eyes with which we

try to make sense of the surroundings. However, light is not limited to the narrow band

of wavelengths we can see, but extends across a broad spectrum including long

wavelength radio waves down to short wavelength x-rays and gamma-rays. With such

diversity the field of optics, the science of light, naturally spans a similarly broad

range of application and technology - from communication, sensing and imaging, and

precision measurements, to making observations of the distant cosmos with exquisite

clarity. Recent years have seen the field of optics be transformed with the development

of new materials that can manipulate light in ways that cannot be done in nature. These

so-called metamaterials are bending the rules of light and providing the prospect of

new functional optical technology. At the same time, efforts are underway to control

the quantum nature of light, and manipulate the most elementary components of light –

individual photons – and harness their interactions with matter to form a robust

quantum technology base.

.............

http://www.sciencemag.org/topic/microbiome


The microbes that make us

Over the past 15 years, the invisible microbial world has taken center stage thanks to

DNA sequencing methods that enable researchers to detect bacteria and other organisms

that can’t be grown in culture.

First these techniques revealed vast, diverse

communities inside our guts, on our skin, inside buildings, and on every surface

imaginable.

Next, studies involving germ-free mice (that is, mice that lack microbes)

and other research uncovered ties between these microbes, our so-called microbiota, and

health--with bacteria playing potentially key roles in immunity, obesity, and

development.

So much has happened that in both 2011 and 2013 Science named the

microbiome as one of its breakthroughs of the year and in 2012 and 2016 we published

special issues on the topic.

Today, Science strives to cover advances that reveal the

specific ways in which the microbiota influences the physiology of the host, both in a

healthy and in a diseased state and how the microbiota may be manipulated, either at

the organismal or molecular level, to improve the health of the host.

What’s hot right

now is extending the role of microbes in human biology and recognizing that viruses,

too, have an impact, and understanding how specific microbes and their products

contribute to healthy and diseased states.






THIS BARELY SCRATCHES THE TRUTH OF WHATS ALREADY POSSIBLE,

BUT AT LEAST WE ARE AT THE SAME PAGE.........

AND I REALLY DOUBT IF ITS THE WHOLE TRUTH ABOUT BACTERIA..............
WHICH CREATES EVEN MORE OPPORTUNITY FOR THE MIT-1000


JMO